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Retrospectiva is an open source, web-based, project management and bug-tracking tool. It is intended to assist the collaborative aspect of work carried out by software development teams through the use of blogs, a wiki and tickets. Users open tickets to track bugs, and request enhancements. ... [More] Administrators set targets for the team through milestones. A milestone is considered completed when all tickets assigned to it are closed. The wiki is used for the documentation of the project, whilst the blog logs ongoing progress. When used in conjunction, these tools provide a helpful framework for developing and maintaining source code. The generated code can be browsed directly in Retrospectiva, and changesets record updates made to the source repository. [Less]

5.0
 
  0 reviews  |  2 users  |  84,495 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 5 days ago
 
 

Encore is an online academic community dedicated to the learning sciences. The community is powered by a variety of technologies, including a modified version of the Confluence Enterprise Wiki by Atlassian Software, and a custom-built Ruby on Rails application. This project opens the source code ... [More] behind some of these technologies and modifications under the GPL. [Less]

4.0
   
  0 reviews  |  1 user  |  11,059 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed almost 2 years ago
 
 

Instiki (What Is Instiki) is a wiki clone so pretty and easy to set up, you’ll wonder if it’s really a wiki. In fact it’s not only a wiki. It supports file uploads, PDF export, RSS feeds, multiple users, multiple wiki sites and password protection. Some people even use Instiki as a CMS - ... [More] Content Management System because of its ability to export static pages. [Less]

0
 
  0 reviews  |  1 user  |  27,625 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed about 2 years ago
 
 

OverviewThere are lots of Ruby wikis. Why another one? Simple: this one is sweet. Ok, that’s not exactly it. Really we just needed a simple, fast, extensible wiki for our own internal use. After we were done we realized that it might be useful to others, too. So here you go. FeaturesTags ... [More] Search Textile markdown plus enhancements for inline source code Revision comparison (inspired by Instiki and Writeboard) Pluggable external authentication Recent changes listing RSS feeds for individual page changes or entire wiki Sweet scriptaculous drawer effects Written in Rails for easy modification SampleTry out all the editing features here: http://samplewiki.bitscribe.net CreditsBitswiki was written by James Lindenbaum (james at bitscribe.net), with tweaks and enhancements by various members of the Bitscribe crew. [Less]

0
 
  0 reviews  |  0 users  |  7,187 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 9 days ago
 
 

This project is meant for personal websites. It has two components. First, it has a blog for posting site updates. Second, it has a wiki for storing personal articles. All formatting for the blog and article components is done in Markdown. The site supports full caching for optimal ... [More] performance. It also supports multiple users, so that you and your friends can keep the site up to date. [Less]

0
 
  0 reviews  |  0 users  |  6,329 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 3 days ago
 
 

I'll create several Ruby libraries dispatched from qwikWeb, a Wiki engine written in Ruby.

0
 
  0 reviews  |  0 users  |  0 current contributors
  wiki ruby
 
 

I'll use this to publish any: rails plugins scripts configurations See my wiki

0
 
  0 reviews  |  0 users  |  248 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 5 days ago
 
 

Qb, (italian expression used in cooking, roughly meaning "enough") is a small wiki written using rubyonrails, loosely based on the original Instiki2. It is what is used for ruby-it, and although it is basically featureless and buggy, it served the italian ruby community quite well in the last years.

0
 
  0 reviews  |  0 users  |  69,891 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed about 16 hours ago
 
 

Atomic Gerbil provides a simple and lightweight CMS built using Ruby on Rails.

0
 
  0 reviews  |  0 users  |  0 current contributors
 
 

An application wiki is designed to encourage ordinary users to develop a literacy in building real applications. In the same way that Wikipedia allows users to collaborate on text, the hope is that an application wiki would let users collaborate on not just words but real behavior. The framework ... [More] is loosely based on Ruby on Rails but uses a component pattern where users can author new components and inherit functionality of existing components. The current framework provides a number of simple applications from instant turnkey chat-rooms to rooms where you can drag windows around and control the layout on the fly. The ultimate goal is to have a fully transparent programming environment where as much of the environment itself is self-editable by the users. Ideas here are drawn from Wikipedia, Camping, Hackety Hack, Mousehole, Squeak, Ning, Prototype Windows, PageFlakes and comments from R0ml at OSCON regarding an emerging new literacy. See http://appwiki.com for an example. - a [Less]

0
 
  0 reviews  |  0 users  |  57,358 lines of code  |  0 current contributors  |  Analyzed 3 days ago
 
 
 
 

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